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Matchmaking service unveiled for Indiana inventors and IP attorneys

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www.theindianalawyer.com by Marilyn Odendahl

Indiana University Maurer School of Law is getting into the matchmaking business.

The law school’s Center for Intellectual Property Research has opened a patent hub which will connect inventors with IP attorneys willing to do pro bono work. Garage inventors and small entrepreneurs looking for help filing a patent and attorneys searching for volunteer opportunities will be matched to, possibly, start a business relationship.

The hub, Patent Connect for Hoosiers, was unveiled Sept. 1 as part of IU Maurer’s Launch IP event at Eli Lilly and Co. headquarters in Indianapolis. Both the law school’s IP Clinic and the hub were lauded as meeting a need among small business owners and helping Indiana’s economy grow.

“What you’re doing here is really (providing) the missing link that we’ve not been able to figure out statewide,” said keynote speaker Lt. Gov. Sue Ellspermann. “Putting those legal services (to work getting) trademarks, patents, and helping in that commercialization of products is so important.”

The hub is working in partnership with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and has been designated to serve Indiana. Other hubs have been established across the country with the focus of helping independent inventors who may be at a disadvantage in trying to get the money together to pay for the patent application.

IU Maurer has created a website, www.patentconnect.org, which will serve as the intake center for inventors needing help and attorneys wanting to volunteer their services. The hub will screen the inventors, allowing only those who qualify economically and have viable products into the network.

Once the website identifies a potential match, the attorney can either accept or decline. If the match is accepted, the hub steps out of the process and leaves the attorney and client to form a direct business relationship.

Norman Hedges, director of the Intellectual Property Law Clinic at IU Maurer, said the pro bono work in IP really helps individuals exercise their constitutional rights. Inventors and entrepreneurs who cannot afford a patent to protect their ideas are losing their rights guaranteed by Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution.

As such, Hedges see the voluntary IP work as qualifying for pro bono under the “administration of justice” clause in Rule 6.1 of the Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct.

Faegre Baker Daniels associate Jessica Van Dalen has taken a client through Patent Connect for Hoosiers. She and her colleagues have filed a patent application for the individual and have plans to continue the representation.

“It was very fulfilling,” she said. “This inventor was so excited that someone cared about their invention and cared enough to help them through the process. It’s very exciting to see how enthusiastic they are.”

EVSC Media Opportunity Going on Now!

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What: 200 EVSC Students Participate in 9th Annual Catchin’ with Capin

When: Now through noon

Where: Lake by Cracker Barrel and Sweet Water on the east side.

 

More than 200 students are trying their luck at fishing this morning for the ninth annual Catchin’ with Capin event. The students will be fishing with Capin at the lake behind Cracker Barrel and Sweet Water on Evansville’s east side.

 

Background: The event was begun in 2007, by then Harrison senior Kyle Capin, who wanted to give his friends with special needs the same experiences and love for fishing that he has.  In the first year – only about 32 students from Harrison High School were in attendance.  But now, the event has grown and includes students from many area schools.  Kyle also has received the local Jefferson Award through Leadership Evansville, for this event.

State’s Request for Secretarial Disaster Declaration Approved in 8 Counties

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Today, the U.S. Department of Agriculture approved a secretarial disaster declaration for 8 of Indiana’s 92 counties as requested by Governor Mike Pence, Lt. Governor Sue Ellspermann, and Indiana Farm Service Agency Executive Director Julia A. Wickard in a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack in August. The request came after Indiana farmers suffered significant crop damage and losses caused by flooding and excessive rain since May 1 of this year. Fifty-three other counties were previously approved on August 12 after a similar request.

“It has been a challenging year for Hoosier farmers. I’m grateful that the United States Department of Agriculture has recognized the hardships our farmers have faced by making available low-interest loans to additional Indiana counties,” said Governor Pence. “Hoosier farmers are resilient, but this designation will help those who suffered property damage as a result of the significant rainfall and flooding.”

Under the secretarial disaster declaration, low-interest emergency loans are available to all producers suffering losses in the 8 counties for which the secretarial disaster has been approved, as well as in affected contiguous counties. These counties include Clark, Fulton, Morgan, Owen, Rush, Shelby, White, and Whitley counties.

Farmers interested in applying for loans can visit http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app?state=in&agency=fsa and contact their local FSA offices for application details. Information regarding loan uses, eligibility, and loan requirements can be found on the attached document as provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

USI Trustees approve two engineering degrees

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Manufacturing engineering degree to be first of its kind in Indiana

At its regular meeting on September 3, 2015, the University of Southern Indiana Board of Trustees approved two new undergraduate degree programs, a Bachelor of Science in Manufacturing Engineering and a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering, both of which would be housed within USI’s Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education. The manufacturing engineering degree would be the first of its kind in the state and one of only around 20 such programs in the country.

USI has offered a bachelor’s degree in engineering since 2002, but this marks the first time the Engineering Department would offer named degrees within the field. The degree programs will next move to the Indiana Commission for Higher Education for approval.

“Since we established an engineering degree in 2002, enrollment in the program has grown to more than 330, with hundreds of graduates now serving business and industry in our region,” said Scott Gordon, dean of the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education. “The demand for engineering continues to grow rapidly, and the development of named engineering degrees would be the logical next step to meet this demand.”

USI’s manufacturing engineering program would prepare graduates for entry level positions in the field, including private industry, consulting or governmental agencies. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects a 4.5 percent growth in manufacturing engineering jobs from 2012 to 2022 nationwide, with some industries seeing growth as high as 39.5 percent. In addition, Indiana’s Department of Workforce Development projects growth at 6.5 percent within the state.

Since USI began offering a bachelor’s degree in engineering, there has been a growing demand from students and prospective students for a named degree in mechanical engineering and, employers are often looking for graduates with a degree in that area. The Bureau of Labor and Statistics indicates a five percent growth in mechanical engineering positions nationally, translating to more than 11,000 jobs by 2022. Indiana is poised to capture many of these jobs with the seventh highest availability of mechanical engineering jobs in the United States, ranging from manufacturing and design of automotive and aerospace parts to scientific research and development services. Indiana also has the third highest percentage of engineering positions for every 1,000 jobs available. Regionally, the demand for mechanical engineers is nearly double that of the state.

Ribbon cut on USI’s Performance Center
Following the board meeting, trustees, guests and members of the community attended a ribbon cutting for USI’s new $17.2 million Performance Center located at the heart of campus and adjacent to the University Center. The Performance Center has been in use since this spring but this event marked the official ribbon cutting for the facility to coincide with the start of the fall semester. For the last several years, theatre productions were staged in the 100-seat Mallette Studio Theatre, a black box theatre in the lower level of the Liberal Arts Center.

In addition to the ribbon cutting, guests were entertained by performances that included USI Theatre alumni and local actress and middle school student Lillybea Ireland. A reception followed in the atrium with music by The Flatheads.

The Performance Center seats nearly 300 in cushioned, accessible seating and features clear sight lines, a thrust stage including a 12’x12’ floor trap, light walls containing thousands of LED lights with a full spectrum of colors, three permanent balconies used as staging areas, and a Steinway concert grand piano made specifically for the center.

 

Spacious dressing and green rooms are only the beginning of behind-the-scenes advances. In design and technology, students are exposed to new and innovative techniques, supported by a state-of-the-art design studio and all new production shops that also opened on campus in 2014.

The Performance Center was designed by Holzman Moss Bottino Architecture of New York, designer of USI’s campus landmark, The Cone. Some of the Performance Center design features include:

 

Can Clay Corporation Clay Pipe

For 104 years, the Can Clay Corporation of Cannelton, Indiana, has produced clay for underground utility and sewer piping. It is typically fired at 2,000 degrees over the course of seven days. Twelve and 14-foot lengths of the 21-inch diameter CanOlok vitrified clay pipe are erected vertically to enclose structural steel columns.

 

Jasper Chair Company Chair Legs

The Jasper Chair Company, of Jasper, Indiana, has manufactured wood chairs from their own woodland since 1921. Twelve hundred steam-bent chair legs have been assembled and stained to form rosettes suspended from the lobby ceiling. The same chair legs are used in the donor recognition display in the second floor lobby.

 

Red Sandstone

The red sandstone on the exterior and interior walls is from Brazil, Indiana, and pays homage to the Smithsonian Institution’s Castle. Built in 1855, the castle is the oldest building on the National Mall. Congressman Robert Dale Owen (son of Robert Owen, founder of the second utopian experiment at New Harmony, Indiana) was chair of the Smithsonian Building Committee. His brother, geologist David Dale Owen, recommended it be built from red sandstone. Both Owens resided in New Harmony for a time, and USI is one of the sponsors of Historic New Harmony, an initiative to create and retain interest in the history and current life of New Harmony.

 

Toyota Sienna Dash Panels

Thirty-five Sienna dash panels, a generous gift from Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Inc., of Princeton, Indiana, form part of the acoustical environment for the Performance Center. These panels serve as reflective surfaces just below the catwalk rings at ceiling level. They direct reflective sound and provide better speech intelligibility for the audience and performers.

 

Donor Recognition Display

A donor recognition display, designed by former USI student Matt Wagner of Matt Wagner Design in Evansville, will soon be installed. It was made by Grandview Aluminum Products, Inc., Grandview, Indiana, in association with Sign-A-Rama, Evansville, Indiana. Located in the second floor lobby, it features recycled aluminum, as well as Jasper (Indiana) Chair Company chair legs.

 

Thrust Stage with Light Wall

The theatre features a thrust stage with additional staging areas incorporated into the walls, a shallow proscenium to allow for greater sightlines, exceptional natural acoustics, and state-of-the-art light and sound technology. The light wall contains thousands of LED lights with a full spectrum of colors.

 

For more information and to purchase tickets for upcoming productions, visit USI.edu/Theatre.

 

In other business, the trustees heard a report from Career Services and Internships, approved housing and meal plan rates for the 2016-2017 academic year, and heard an update on current construction projects.

Evansville Fashion Week September 27 – October 3- YWCA

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September 27th – Fall into Fashion
September 29th – Fashion Give Back
September 30th – Buy for the Y
October 2nd – Legacy of Style Fashion Show & Luncheon October 3rd – Beauty and the Beat

Contact:

Erika Taylor etaylor@ywcaevansville.org (812) 422-1191

YWCA presents the

First Annual

 

The YWCA is pleased to announce the first annual Evansville Fashion Week to be held September 27, 2015 through October 3, 2015. The YWCA has partnered with the Junior League of Evansville, Dillard’s, Shannon Aleksandr’s Salon & Spa, and local boutiques to coordinate a week full of exciting and stylish activities to support the community.

“We are so excited to present a week full of fashion themed events for the community”, said YWCA CEO, Erika Taylor. “As fall begins, people tend to get excited about putting away their swimsuits and breaking out the fall boots and warm sweaters. We want to capitalize on that excitement while raising awareness and funds for the YWCA’s programs. October is also Domestic Violence Awareness Month, so Evansville Fashion Week provides a platform for us to get out the anti-violence message.”

Evansville Fashion Week begins on Sunday, September 27th with Fall into Fashion presented by the Junior League of Evansville and Dillard’s. This exclusive VIP shopping event will be held between 6:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. when the department store will be open only for Fall into Fashion ticket holders and will include give- aways, cocktails and hors d’oeuvres; hair style demonstrations; discounts in every department; and swag bags. This event is open to the public and tickets may be purchased from the Junior League office (812-434-6710) or at Dillard’s department store. All proceeds from Fall into Fashion will be donated to the Junior League of Evansville.

On Tuesday, September 29th the Junior League of Evansville (JLE) will present a live fashion giveback night benefiting the girls in the YWCA’s Live Y’ers program. Live Y’ers is an after-school and mentoring program for at-risk girls. JLE members will provide a workshop on body image, self-esteem, and dressing for success in addition to mentors that will assist girls in selecting appropriate outfits. Each girl will receive new clothing thanks to the generosity of the Junior League of Evansville, Dillard’s and the YWCA.

On Wednesday, September 30th, the YWCA will present Buy for the Y, a shop hop experience featuring a night of discounts and promotions at locally owned boutiques that are extending their business hours for this special occasion. These generous boutiques will be donating 10% of their shop hop sales to the YWCA. In addition to offering this exclusive evening showcasing their fashions, each boutique will have give-aways and refreshments. Participating boutiques include Flutter Newburgh, House of Bluez, Wildflower, Single Thread, and Schon. The Buy for the Y shop hop hours are 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

On Friday, October 2nd, the YWCA will present the 15th Annual Legacy of Style Luncheon and Fashion Show at Old National Events Plaza featuring the latest fall fashions from Dillard’s department store. Over 35 models will walk the runway to showcase clothing and accessories from Dillard’s. Proceeds from ticket sales and a raffle of amazing gift baskets will raise much needed funds for the YWCA’s programs for women and girls. This event truly is “the chic way to give”! Legacy of Style is open to the public and tickets are available through the YWCA of Evansville. Contact the YWCA at (812) 422-1191 for more information about tickets, corporate tables and sponsorships.

Evansville Fashion Week will conclude on Saturday, October 3rd with the 3rd annual Beauty and the Beat presented by Shannon Aleksandr’s Salon & Spa which raises funds for the YWCA’s domestic violence shelter, Live Y’ers, and transitional housing program. This special ladies’ night will feature pampering to the extreme with stylists offering free haircuts, manicures, makeup applications, and pedicures. Stylists will also perform on-the-spot beauty makeovers showcasing the latest in hair and makeup trends. A runway show featuring fall fashions from Flutter Newburgh, House of Bluez, Wildflower, Single Thread, and Schon will be the highlight of the evening. Guests will also enjoy delicious food and cocktails in addition to dancing to tunes of DJ Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO. Beauty and the Beat is open to the public and tickets are available through the YWCA of Evansville and Shannon Aleksandr’s Salon & Spa.

This is the third year that the salon has partnered with the YWCA to present Beauty and the Beat. “We at Shannon Aleksandr’s Salon & Spa know that beauty lies not only on the outside but most importantly, the inside,” says owner, Shannon Woolsey. “That’s why we value our partnership and believe in supporting the YWCA’s mission of empowering women by helping them realize the inner beauty they all possess.”

More information about all of these events can be found at www.ywcaevansville.org.

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The YWCA has been serving the Evansville area since 1911 and from its inception has provided housing and services for women and girls. The Evansville YWCA is a member of the YWCA of the U.S.A., the oldest and largest women’s membership movement in the country.

Over the years, YWCA programs have changed to meet the evolving needs of women and girls. In 1979, the YWCA opened the first domestic violence shelter in Evansville. Other current programs include a Transition Housing Program for women in recovery, Emergency Shelter for homeless women and children, an after-school and mentoring program, called Live Y’ers, for at-risk girls in

grades three through 12, and a Summer Fun day camp for school-aged children. Special programs and events for the general public are also offered. Visit www.ywcaevansville.org for more information.

IT’S TIME FOR THE MASSES TO DISCUSS “GOOD PUBLIC POLICY”

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Are you aware when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny! When the Government fear the people we have Liberty! Could this be a good reason for a “Call To Assemble”?

It’s obvious it time that the “Masses Assemble” to demand that our elected officials begin to practice “Good Public Policy”.?

Would like to see it a “Good Ole Fashion” political gathering at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum that encourges our elected officials to begin practice ‘Good Public Policy”?

Commander Mark Acker of the Veteran’s Council of Vanderburgh County announced today that the Council will host a “Call to Assemble” on September 23, 2015 beginning at 5:00 PM, at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

The “Call to Assemble” will be a non-partisan gathering of area political candidates and the general public to encourage “Good Public Policy” decisions by our elected officials. The “CALL TO ASSEMBLE” will be a peaceful, positive and hopeful event that is planned to encourage honest, open governance, with transparency and will bring better accountability to our beloved City.

State Representative and Mayoral Candidate Gail Reicken (D), Steven Wozniak an Independent and current Mayor Lloyd Winnecke (R) are being invited to participate in a Lincoln-Douglas style question/answer session, featuring randomly selected written questions from the audience, that are drawn from a barrel. Current officeholders and political candidates with their supporters, Tea Party Representatives, CORE Group, a contingency from the Libertarian Party, 2nd Amendment Patriots, Independents, Republicans and Democrats and the General public are invited to join in.

Food and drink will be available. The doors will open at 5:00 pm. Dress is casual, however Military

Veterans are encouraged to wear their uniforms. VIP tables are available to groups and organization for a minimal fee. General admission is free. All proceeds will go to the Veteran’s Council of Vanderburgh County to help defray the costs of the maintenance of the Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

For additional information to purchase a VIP table, to become a sponsor of this event or to pledge a donation to the Veteran’s Council of Vanderburgh County please contact the Event Coordinator Denise Shane-Cheaney at 812.909.1900 or by emailing pinkelephantcelebrations@gmail.com.

Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s IS IT TRUE articles because they are always an interesting read. Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

A speech. A party fundraiser. In Florida. Clinton? Sanders? No, Joe Biden.

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The Washington Post, by Ed O’Keefe

Rarely has a speech on the importance of community colleges been more closely scrutinized.

That was the central theme of remarks delivered by Vice President Biden on Wednesday at one of the nation’s largest universities — at least, the stated theme. The other, which he only hinted at, was the political subtext: Still grieving from the death of his oldest son, Biden is weighing a presidential bid. And until he makes his 2016 decision, everything he says and does will be viewed through a campaign prism.

His remarks, which lasted half an hour, had the ring of a potential presidential candidate. There were references to “My Jill” — his wife, a community college professor, who is reportedly undecided about a presidential run. He paid homage to the American Dream. He cheered the merits of immigration and middle class values. And he talked about his favorite poet, William Butler Yeats.

“Look at all the press you’ve attracted,” he joked to the crowd packed into a sweltering classroom at Miami Dade College. “Their interest in community colleges has impressed me. I hope that’s what they’re going to write about.”

The speech was the first stop on an itinerary that marks the vice president’s most active political trek since his son Beau Biden, the 46-year old former Delaware attorney general, died of brain cancer in May. Close friends and aides say the vice president is still undecided about making a late entrance into the Democratic race dominated by Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is slipping in polls, and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is enjoying a summer surge.

A final decision isn’t expected until later this month, and family considerations — including whether they can sustain the demands of a grueling campaign — remain his most pressing concern, according to people familiar with his thinking.

[Family issues weigh heaviest on Biden as he considers a 2016 campaign]

Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.), who attended the speech, said that she didn’t ask, and Biden didn’t mention, any possibility of a presidential run during a private meeting.

“I know what it feel likes to lose a child, and I think that he has to feel it in his gut,” she said. “And I also know how hard it is to run an election — because I have to run so often — and you have to really have the passion for it.”

Mostly, Biden focused on the Obama administration’s push to offer free community college to eligible students.

“The middle class in America is no longer the wealthiest middle class in the world,” he said.

“Middle class in America means you’re able to own your home, not have to rent it,” he added later. “It means you can send your kid to a park in the neighborhood and know that they’ll come home safely. It means that the school in the neighborhood is good enough so that if your child does well, they can get to college and if they make it, you can get them there financially.”

After the speech, Biden ignored two shouted questions from reporters about his possible presidential ambitions before aides began blasting Bruce Springsteen’s “Land of Hope and Dreams” over the speaker system.

On Wednesday night, Biden planned to mingle with top party donors at a South Florida fundraiser for Democratic senators. On Thursday, he is poised to defend the Obama administration’s nuclear deal with Iran in the congressional district of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee who has yet to say what she thinks of the agreement. Biden will meet with skeptics at a Jewish community center in Davie, Fla., marking his most high-profile attempt to date to explain and defend the diplomatic deal.

[Obama secures votes to protect Iran nuclear deal]

The Florida leg of Biden’s travels coincided with encouraging news for his potential campaign.

Draft Biden, the super PAC actively encouraging a campaign, announced a new wave of hires Wednesday in the early primary state of South Carolina, where the vice president enjoys deep ties to party elders. Two prominent South Carolina Democrats, state senator Gerald Malloy and Inez Tenenbaum, the former state education superintendent, plan to co-chair Draft Biden’s South Carolina chapter. The PAC also announced the hiring of a political director, outreach director and field director.

Steve Schale, a Tallahassee-based lobbyist and adviser to Draft Biden, said that the vice president’s entrance into the race “would be healthy for the process.”

Dismissing concerns that a protracted race between Clinton, Biden and others would damage the party, Schale, who served as Florida director for President Obama’s 2008 campaign, noted that Democrats registered hundreds of thousands of new voters in Florida during the epic Obama-Clinton battle.

“We could only have done that because you had both the Clinton folks and the Obama folks who had been organizing themselves for a year,” he said. “We were able to tap in to all of that strength and go out and do some really amazing things.”

A new poll released on Wednesday suggested that Biden would be the preferred candidate of Democrats if Clinton begins running into trouble against potential Republican opponents. The Reuters/Ipsos poll said that 38 percent of Democrats would back Biden as a Clinton alternative; 30 percent would support Sanders, who places first or a close second in recent surveys.

A new Washington Post/ABC News poll, however, delivered mixed results for Biden: He has higher favorability ratings than Clinton among all voters, but among fellow Democrats, she enjoys a higher favorability rating of 80 percent to Biden’s 70 percent.

On Thursday night, Biden travels to Atlanta to speak with Jewish leaders about the Iran agreement. On Monday, he will march in a Labor Day parade in Pittsburgh alongside AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, who said this week that Biden should be given time to mull a campaign.

Along the way, Biden will have plenty of time to demonstrate his natural aplomb with retail campaigning — even if he hesitated slightly on Wednesday. During a tour of a biotechnology lab on the college campus,  student Lilliam Hernandez Guerrero asked if he wanted to help with her experiment. The normally gregarious Biden — perhaps sensitive to the extra scrutiny from a larger-than-normal press pack — demurred.

“I’m going to watch,” he told Guerrero. “I can see the press headline: ‘Biden Screws Up Experiment.'”

The Beach Boys

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PRE-SALE PASSWORD:

CALIFORNIA

SMG Evansville
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Ticket Pre-sale is September 2 at 10am thru September 3 at 10pm. Pre-sale tickets are available through Ticketmaster online, by phone 1-800-745-3000 or at our Box Office.

Tickets go on sale to the general public on Friday, September 4 at 10am.

Ticket Presale Passcode: CALIFORNIA

Thursday, October 15 at 7:30pm
THE BEACH BOYS
Special Guests – The Temptations
SURF & SOUL TOUR
find tickets
As The Beach Boys mark more than a half century of making music, the group continues to ride the crest of a wave unequalled in America’s musical history.  The Beach Boys have become synonymous with the California lifestyle and have become an American icon to fans around the world.
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Price: $99, $79, $59, $39

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Governor Pence to Honor State’s Long-term Employees Tomorrow

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Governor Mike Pence will honor state employees who have more than 35 years of service to Hoosiers and the state. Details below.

 

Friday, September 4:

 

10:30 a.m. EDT – Governor Pence to honor state employees who have more than 35 years of service to Hoosiers and the state

*Media are welcome to attend.

Statehouse – South Atrium, 200 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis, IN

Scam Alert

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Evansville Police want to warn tri-state residents of a phone scam that is increasing in intensity throughout our community. You may get a call from someone claiming to be with the Internal Revenue Service and telling you that the I.R.S. is filing a lawsuit against you. A number to call is provided and upon calling they seek personal information and may demand money be sent to settle the “law suit.” The I.R.S. does not call by phone and threaten law suits or ask for your Social Security Number and other personal information. Further information on this is available at:

http://www.irs.gov/uac/Newsroom/IRS-Repeats-Warning-about-Phone-Scams